4.6 Article

The Interior Angular Momentum of Core Hydrogen Burning Stars from Gravity-mode Oscillations

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL LETTERS
Volume 847, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.3847/2041-8213/aa8a62

Keywords

asteroseismology; stars: evolution; stars: massive; stars: oscillations; stars: rotation; waves

Funding

  1. European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union's Horizon research and innovation program from the Research Foundation Flanders (FWO) [670519, G.0B69.13, V4.272.17N]
  2. National Science Foundation of the United States [NSF PHY11-25915]

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A major uncertainty in the theory of stellar evolution is the angular momentum distribution inside stars and its change during stellar life. We compose a sample of 67 stars in the core hydrogen burning phase with a log g value from high-resolution spectroscopy, as well as an asteroseismic estimate of the near-core rotation rate derived from gravity-mode oscillations detected in space photometry. This assembly includes 8 B-type stars and 59 AF-type stars, covering a mass range from 1.4 to 5M(circle dot), i.e., it concerns intermediate-mass stars born with a well-developed convective core. The sample covers projected surface rotation velocities v sin i is an element of [9, 242] km s(-1) and core rotation rates up to 26 mu Hz, which corresponds to 50% of the critical rotation frequency. We find deviations from rigid rotation to be moderate in the single stars of this sample. We place the near-core rotation rates in an evolutionary context and find that the core rotation must drop drastically before or during the short phase between the end of the core hydrogen burning and the onset of core helium burning. We compute the spin parameter, which is the ratio of twice the rotation rate to the mode frequency (also known as the inverse Rossby number), for 1682 gravity modes and find the majority (95%) to occur in the sub-inertial regime. The 10 stars with Rossby modes have spin parameters between 14 and 30, while the gravito-inertial modes cover the range from 1 to 15.

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